More than 100 religious leaders gathered Wednesday in Geneva for a two-day conference entitled "The Impact of King Abdullah's Inter-Religious Dialogue Initiative in Disseminating Human Values." Many of the listed "conference participants," however, are tainted by troubling resumes of anti-Semitism, empathy for radical Islamist ideology, and support for terrorist organizations.

The conference organizer, the Muslim World League (MWL) is alleged to have connections to al-Qaida. Reports detail how MWL has provided Islamic militants, including Osama bin Laden and his followers, with financial and organizational help. MWL's U.S. offices have been raided by the FBI as part of an investigation into a network of Virginia-based Islamic charities and corporate entities suspected of having ties to terrorist groups. Also, MWL leaders have made statements in support of suicide bombings and published anti-Semitic articles.

Perhaps the most disconcerting participant listed to attend King Abdullah's conference is William Baker — an anti-Semite with neo-Nazi connections. Baker claims that he met with the now-U.S. designated Foreign Terrorist Organization (FTO) Hezbollah during the Lebanon hostage crisis of the 1980s and early 1990s. While Hezbollah was not yet designated at that time, Baker was hanging out with an organization that was kidnapping foreign nationals in Lebanon and holding them hostage, foreign nationals that were largely American and European.

In speeches and articles, Baker claims that he was "invited to go to Beirut by Hezbollah where they were holding the Western hostages." He said he "met with Hezbollah for four years, from ‘86-‘89 trying to keep the hostages safe there," and that he was "able to bring messages about the hostages back to their families."

Baker's accounts reveal no attempt on his part to convince the leadership that the hostages should be freed, other than mentioning once that the Hezbollah leaders should have "let the sick go." To top it off, Baker empathized with Hezbollah:

"And you know what? I found that the people of Lebanon also only wanted peace. They didn't want a war. They wanted the occupation forces to get out of their country to leave their land."

Baker was also chairman of the "Populist Party" — founded by neo-Nazi Willis Carto in 1984 — organizing its national convention that year. Carto, a founder of the American Nazi party, also started the Southern California-based Institute for Historical Review, a group whose central purpose is to deny the Holocaust. While serving as national chairman of the Populist Party in 1984, Baker allegedly introduced a platform that would have allowed states to restore Jim Crow racial laws.

Baker's record of anti-Semitic speech cements his disturbing resume. Baker has been quoted saying that Jews are not the "chosen of God," and that he dreads getting off a plane in New York: "God help me. Why? 'Cause the first people I meet when I get off the plane are pushy, belligerent American Jews."

In his book “The Theft of a Nation,” Baker writes that the "Zionist state of Israel . . . should be dismantled and eventually eliminated."

Two other expected conference participants of interest are Larry Shaw, chairman of the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) and John Esposito, professor of Religion and International Affairs at Georgetown University. Esposito, as a new IPT dossier shows, has close ties to radical Islamists and Islamist groups and has repeatedly defended their ideology. The dossier describes his ties and thoughts on Hamas, Hezbollah, the outlawed Tunisian Islamist party An-Nahdah, the Muslim Brotherhood and other radical groups and individuals.

Shaw's group, CAIR, was born out of the Islamic Associations for Palestine (IAP), a known Hamas propaganda arm. CAIR was recently listed as an unindicted co-conspirator in the Holy Land Foundation (HLF) Hamas financing trial, which returned guilty verdicts on 108 counts in November 2008. Information which surfaced in this trial forced the FBI to cut ties with CAIR over questions surrounding CAIR's ties to Hamas. Shaw told the Fayetteville Observer that his organization was not tied to Hamas and blamed anti-Muslim sentiment for criticisms of his group.

At a past interfaith conference King Abdullah "stressed the need for better communication and understanding between Islam, Judaism, and Christianity" and for others to look "the noble principles and elevated ethics that represent the foundation of religions."

A neo-Nazi, a terror apologist, and an organizing group suspected of past al-Qaida ties. If this lineup reflects "noble principles and elevated ethics," we'd hate to see what the king considers to be extremist.

More than 100 religious leaders gathered Wednesday in Geneva for a two-day conference entitled "The Impact of King Abdullah's Inter-Religious Dialogue Initiative in Disseminating Human Values." Many of the listed "conference participants," however, are tainted by troubling...